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Related: Rice urges Hamas to dedicate itself to
peace
CAIRO, Feb. 21 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice on Tuesday urged the Palestinian militant group Hamas to
renounce violence after it swept to power in the Jan. 25 Palestinian
parliamentary elections.
"You cannot have one foot in the camp of terror and another foot
in the camp of politics," Rice told a joint press conference with Egyptian
Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit.
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| US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice(L)
and Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmad Abul Gheit give a joint press
conference in Cairo. (AFP) | The top
U.S. diplomat reiterated demand that Hamas renounce violence, recognize Israel
and accept existing agreements before taking power in the Palestinian
territories.
"The international community expects that any Palestinian
government will have to meet certain requirements for governing, which means a
dedication to peace, a dedication to the agreements that the Palestinians have
signed on before," Rice said.
"Obviously, you can't have peace if you don't recognize the
other partner and therefore the recognition of Israel's right to exist and the
need to renounce terror," she added.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday officially
appointed senior Hamas leader Ismail Haneya as prime minister and asked him to
form a new Palestinian government.
Hamas, branded by Israel and Washington as terrorist
organization, has rejected negotiation with Israel and the Western threat to cut
off aid to the future Palestinian government if it failed to meet certain
conditions.
Rice, who arrived in the Egyptian capital Cairo on Tuesday, the
first leg of her five-day regional tour aimed at rallying support of
Washington's Arab allies for its policy on Hamas and Iran.
Rice is scheduled to meet Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on
Wednesday before heading to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Rice is expected to urge the Arab allies to press Hamas to
moderate its stance as Hamas leaders are wooing the Arab and Islamic world to
make up the shortfall of money in case there is a cutoff in Western
assistance.
Egypt, which agrees with Washington on the need for Hamas to
drop its commitment to the destruction of Israel, has so far stopped short of
exerting substantial pressure, apparently fearing a backlash at home where
anti-U.S. sentiments are always running high.
An Arab analyst believed that Rice would also use the trip to
the Gulf region to press for isolating Iran, which it accuses of seeking nuclear
weapons under the cover of a civilian nuclear program.
Iran has denied the U.S. charge, saying that its nuclear program
is solely for peaceful purposes.
"Washington needs the support of the Gulf nations, which are
neighbors to Iran, for its campaign to isolate Teheran over its alleged nuclear
ambitions," said Saber Rabie, a former professor of political science at Cairo
University. Enditem |